’12th Fail’ Review: Vikrant Massey’s Stellar Performance in a Tale of Success and Failure

'12th Fail' Review: Vikrant Massey's Stellar Performance in a Tale of Success and Failure

Sometimes the underdog story strikes the right chord, and writer-director Vidhu Vinod Chopra brings his mastery into play in his latest outing, “12th Fail”.

Based on the novel of the same name by Anurag Pathak, it chronicles the journey of Manoj Kumar Sharma from Chambal, who, despite being a 12th dropout, sets out to prepare for the UPSC (Union Public Service Commission) exam, considered one of the toughest.

Chopra uses this inspiring and exciting tale as his canvas and paints it with several emotions – pain, anger, failure, victory, helplessness, and confidence.

Plot

Starring Vikrant Massey as Manoj, who’s shown to have taken up low-paying jobs at a tea stall, then at an aata chakki, and in between, he even cleaned toilets, “12th Fail” doesn’t sugarcoat anything and presents the scenario as raw and real as possible.

And it surely will resonate with thousands and lakhs of students who prepare and appear for the UPSC exam year after year – while a few make it, others ‘restart’ and give it another shot.

Chopra tells us about the restart funda for UPSC aspirants early on in the film and sticks to it almost throughout, till the very end, weaving it subtly at various stages in the film.

About ’12th fail movie’

“12th Fail” also takes on the loopholes of our education system where a school in Chambal openly makes the kids cheat in their board exams because only if they clear the 12th standard can they get some jobs and earn for their families.

One day, when DSP Dushyant Singh (Priyanshu Chatterjee), in a small yet impactful role, lands at the school and stops kids from cheating, that’s when Manoj (Massey) realizes that this is the path he wishes to follow.

But the next year, DSP is transferred, and the school is back to implementing the usual practice and everyone passes with the first division except Manoj, who is happy with his third division.

He lands in Gwalior for UPSC coaching, and eventually, fate takes him to Delhi, where he finds himself in the middle of a chaotic Mukherjee Nagar area, famous for being home to a million students who have come from all parts of the country to get that one spot in the UPSC.

How Manoj, along with his girlfriend Shraddha Joshi (Medha Shankar), navigates this journey, daily hurdles is what “12th Fail” focuses on.

Massey takes the cake for delivering a brilliant performance, easily his career best so far. At every step, he brings a myriad of shades to his character.

As a teenager in school, he is oblivious that cheating is immoral. As a struggling UPSC student, he is full of grit and determination and doesn’t mind sleeping three hours every night to ensure he has enough time to study and do petty jobs for survival.

Massey owns up to Manoj’s character in all aspects that you’d expect and performs it to the word T, leaving no scope for any complaints. At 147 minutes, “12th Fail” never stretches to the point that it gets boring or preachy.

It keeps the tension, chaos, hustle, and pace intact, which makes it an engaging watch. Chopra ensures that in every subplot or track he introduces, there’s a story of its own, and not at once, any of them look forced in the screenplay.

Be it Manoj’s friend Pandey, a government servant’s son, or Manoj’s mentor Gauri bhaiya (Anshuman Pushkar), who, after failing to fulfill his dream of becoming an IPS, devotes his life to training others and getting them to restart life – everyone has a story if their own, narrated with nuances.

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Shrabani Sarkar is a celebrity news author who has been covering the latest gossip and scandals in the entertainment industry for Panasiabiz. Shrabani is passionate about celebrity news and enjoys sharing her insights and opinions with her loyal fans. Shrabani can be reached at [email protected]